The powers the commission has, including doing a normal investigation once we have received a complaint from a dissatisfied complainant, mean that we obviously oversee the complaints that the Canadian Forces provost marshal is handling. Once we have received a complaint from a dissatisfied complainant, we can make certain decisions in moving forward with an investigation, whether it be a public interest investigation or an investigation that would be done by our investigators, and then a commission member would deal with the potential recommendations and the results of it.
Certainly, the powers differ in the public interest hearings. We have the power of subpoena. There are some issues related to documentation and things of that sort that we are looking at through a five-year review, and there is potentially some additional work that can be done in those areas in terms of documentation and things like that.
But there are significant powers in doing an investigation. Obviously, the CF member who's being investigated doesn't have to talk to us. There's no compelling piece there for them to respond to us, but in almost all cases they do.